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Radical Philosophy Review:
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Eduardo Mendieta, Jeffrey Paris
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Radical Philosophy Review:
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Enrique Dussel
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In this essay, Enrique Dussel provides a textual “rereading” of Karl Marx’s theory of fetishism according to his scattered but significant comments on religion as they extend throughout the whole of his work. In Part I, “The Place of the Subject of Religion in the Whole Work of Marx,” Dussel demonstrates Marx’s differentiation between a critique of the essence of religion and its manifestations, arguing that there is a space in Marx for a anti-fetishized liberatory religion. In Part II, “Toward a Theory of Fetishism in General,” he provides a methodological account of such a religion, as well as a panorama of the content of this essence of religion. These accounts provide the basis for more clearly identifying both religious fetishism and the fetishist character of capital.
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Radical Philosophy Review:
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Chad Kautzer
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The normative politics of Rorty’s Achieving Our Country are inextricably related to the political-philosophical principles of Contingency,irony, and solidarity, yet the nature of this relation is not explicit, particularly regarding Rorty’s earlier public/private sphere distinctionand renunciation of metavocabularies. This paper argues that Rorty’s call for patriotism as a necessary condition for political practiceand a romantic historicism that replaces intersubjectively recognized history, leads to a privatized conception of the nation, betraying the most promising principles of Contingency, irony, and solidarity, and threatening the necessary conditions of democratic and solidaristic practices. This critique also accounts for the theoretical lacunas in Rorty’s most recent essays attempting to elucidate American Empire.
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Radical Philosophy Review:
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Fred Dallmayr
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In this essay, Fred Dallmayr considers the writings and activism of Arundhati Roy, author of The God of Small Things and Power Politics. First, Dallmayr examines the proper role of the writer-activist, comparing Roy to Edward Said. For each, writing and politicsare neither separate nor are they independent of the writer’s distinctive being-in-the-world. He then examines her critique of corporate business and the war machine, especially in relation to the construction of destructive “mega-dams” in India. The privatization of public services in India has done little to provide safe drinking water and electricity to some eighty percent of India’s rural population. Dallmayr finds in Roy an unmatched voice of hope and commitment to a more just, more humane future, sustained by a love that will not quit.
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Radical Philosophy Review:
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Angela Y. Davis, Eduardo Mendieta
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Radical Philosophy Review:
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Harry van der Linden
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Radical Philosophy Review:
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Steve Martinot
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Radical Philosophy Review:
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Michael W. Howard
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Radical Philosophy Review:
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Jeffery Lynn Nicholas
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Radical Philosophy Review:
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Richard Hudelson
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Radical Philosophy Review:
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Edward Tverdek
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Radical Philosophy Review:
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Radical Philosophy Review:
Volume >
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Issue: 2
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14.
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Radical Philosophy Review:
Volume >
6 >
Issue: 1
Eduardo Mendieta, Jeffrey Paris
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| cited by
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15.
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Radical Philosophy Review:
Volume >
6 >
Issue: 1
Enrique Dussel
abstract |
view |
rights & permissions
| cited by
In this essay, Enrique Dussel provides a textual “rereading” of Karl Marx’s theory of fetishism according to his scattered but significantcomments on religion as they extend throughout the whole of his work. In Part I, “The Place of the Subject of Religion in the Whole Work of Marx,” Dussel demonstrates Marx’s differentiation between a critique of the essence of religion and its manifestations, arguing that there is a space in Marx for a anti-fetishized liberatory religion. In Part II, “Toward a Theory of Fetishism in General,” he provides a methodological account of such a religion, as well as a panorama of the content of this essence of religion. These accounts provide the basis for more clearly identifying both religious fetishism and the fetishist character of capital.
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Radical Philosophy Review:
Volume >
6 >
Issue: 1
Fred Dallmayr
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In this essay, Fred Dallmayr examines the role played by Hindu-Muslim relations in India’s struggle for independence. He documents Gandhi’s long involvement in “the Muslim question” and his promotion of a “heart unity” that sees inter-communal harmony as a precondition for genuine independence. This contrasted sharply with the formal constitutional approach of prominent Muslim leaders, a contrast heightened by Gandhi’s occasional “Hindu” rhetoric, his response to the 1921 Mappila rebellion in Kerala, but most importantly, a procedural differentiation with Muslim leaders over “separate-but-equal” vs. liberal constitutionalist positions. The lessons from this investigation lead Dallmayr to conclude that a “heart-and-mind” unity has substantial salience for a cooperative approach to contemporary inter-ethnic and inter-religious conflicts.
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Radical Philosophy Review:
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Reyes Mate
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Radical Philosophy Review:
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Kenneth MacKendrick, Christopher Brittain
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Radical Philosophy Review:
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Nelson Maldonado-Torres
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Radical Philosophy Review:
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Michael Ostling
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